Senate Democrats aim fire at rich, obscure brothers

FILE - In this Aug. 30, 2013 file photo, Americans for Prosperity Foundation Chairman David Koch speaks in Orlando, Fla. Democratic Senate candidates are gambling they can turn voters against two obscure billionaire brothers who are funding attacks on them and the president's health care law. Democrats are denouncing Charles and David Koch two of world's richest people. The pair's political network is spending millions on TV ads hitting Democrats in North Carolina and several other states. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid says the Kochs are paying huge sums to try to "buy" elections and advance a self-serving agenda of low taxes and less regulation. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack, File)

WASHINGTON — Democratic Senate candidates, facing withering criticism on the national health care law, are gambling they can turn voters against two billionaire brothers funding the attacks — even if few Americans would recognize the pair on the street.

In an accelerating counteroffensive stretching from the Senate chamber to Alaska, Democrats are denouncing Charles and David Koch, the key figures behind millions of dollars in conservative TV ads hammering Democratic candidates and their ties to President Barack Obama.

Democrats depict the Kansas-based Koch (pronounced “Coke”) brothers as self-serving oil barons who pay huge sums to try to “buy” elections and advance their agenda of low taxes and less regulation. And they’re using unusually harsh language in the Senate.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid says the Koch-financed ads against Democrats and the health care law contain lies “made up from whole cloth.”

“I guess if you make that much money, you can make these immoral decisions,” Reid, D-Nev., said in a recent Senate speech. “The Koch brothers are about as un-American as anyone I can imagine.”

Republican Sen. Jerry Moran of Kansas defended the Kochs and compared Reid’s remarks to the communist-baiting tactics of Joseph McCarthy.

The Democrats’ strategy depends on persuading enough Americans that the Koch brothers, who rarely appear in public, are so significant and troubling that voters should reject the Republican candidates benefiting from their ads.

In a time of stagnant working-class wages, they note, the Kochs have grown stupendously wealthy while pushing their conservative-to-libertarian causes. Forbes magazine ranks the brothers as tied for sixth among the world’s richest people, worth $40 billion each.

Democratic pollster Geoff Garin says Americans, when given this basic information, believe the brothers are trying to elect a government that helps them at the expense of less wealthy people, who would fare better under Democratic policies.

“The polling we’ve done shows very clearly that people think these unlimited expenditures don’t have anything to do with free speech and have everything to do with skewing what goes on with American government and American politics,” said Garin, who advises Reid. To see the Kochs spend millions to try to privatize Social Security, reduce taxes on oil or “undermine environmental regulations is troubling to voters,” he said.

In North Carolina — where Democratic Sen. Kay Hagan is enduring an avalanche of Koch-related ads denouncing her support of Obama’s health policies_attacks on the Koch brothers will simply draw more attention to their message, said the state’s other senator, Republican Richard Burr.

“I don’t think there’s any resentment to a group or individual spending their money to tell people what’s really going on,” Burr said.

Charles Koch, 78, and David Koch, 73, inherited a small oil company from their father. They expanded worldwide into chemicals, textiles, paper and other products, building a hugely profitable and privately held conglomerate.

Long active in conservative politics, they seized on the 2010 Citizens United court ruling that allows unlimited corporate spending on political campaigns, often without disclosing donors. They helped found Americans for Prosperity, which reported spending $122 million on elections in 2012.

With this year’s election still eight months away, the Koch network already has spent $15 million on Senate races, mostly attacking Democrats over Obamacare. Republicans need to gain six seats to control the 100-member Senate.

Republicans note that liberal billionaires also spend heavily on politics. They point to environmentalist and hedge-fund manager Tom Steyer, who says he will spend at least $100 million on congressional and gubernatorial elections this year.

But Steyer is still examining the field, months after Koch-funded ads began pounding Democrats like Hagan. And Democrats say Steyer will not benefit financially by pushing his climate change agenda, whereas the Kochs’ campaign for lower taxes and less regulation would help big businesses like theirs.

Reid, who admits he’s no gifted orator, is leading the chorus with bombasts from the Senate chamber.

“Think about what an America rigged by the Koch brothers would look like,” he said in one recent speech. “The Koch brothers don’t care about creating a strong public education system in America,” Reid said, nor a “strong safety net of Medicare and Social Security” or “a guarantee of affordable, quality health insurance for every American. Why? Because the Koch brothers can afford to buy all those benefits and more for themselves.”

Reid told reporters: “I’m going to keep talking about them every chance I get because America should not be for sale.”

Democratic candidates nationwide are picking up the theme, said Matt Canter of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign committee.

“We’ve done extensive polling on this,” Canter said. “Voters understand that Republicans are pushing a policy agenda that is good for their benefactors, the Koch brothers.”

“The message we’ve tested does not rest on them knowing who Charles and David Koch are,” Canter said.

In state after state, Democrats are berating the Kochs in speeches and fundraising appeals.

“To overcome Charles and David Koch’s shadowy, fear-mongering TV ads, we have to work harder and be smarter,” says a fundraising letter for Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La.

Koch industries spokesman Steve Lombardo defended the ads. He said, “it is unfortunate that Harry Reid is focused on attacking citizens of the United States rather than the problems facing this country.” He said Koch companies employ more than 60,000 Americans.

“I think the American people are smart and will see through this tactic,” Lombardo said.

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Carbon Monitoring for Action (CARMA) is a database containing information about the carbon emissions of over 60,000 power plants and 20,000 power companies worldwide
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Bill Koch, the brother of Koch Industries Inc. principal owners David and Charles Koch, is a climate change denier who has said that investing in alternative energy is “foolhardy. He founded and currently runs the Oxbow Corporation, which has interests in various energy ventures including coal, natural gas, and petroleum coke. He is worth about $4 billion, according to Forbes.

Back in the early 60's the Koch bros. daddy and his John Birch Society proved to be too right wing for the more sane version of the GOP then in existance and they were banished from the party after Goldwater's defeat.

In Nomember of 1963 they printed and distributed tens of thousands of "Wanted" posters throughout Dallas accusing President Kennedy of Treason for his support of the Civil Rights Amendment that was later pushed through by Johnson.

Now one of their biggest missions, alongside keeping Americans from having access to health insurance, privatizing schools, taking away voting rights, outright buying legislators via ALEC etc., is pushing through the Keystone XL pipeline to it's refineries on the Gulf of Mexico that are set up specifically to deal with high sulfur/carbon crude oil from the tar sands projects in Canada.

All of the products produced from the hideously polluting bitumen will be exported. Meanwhile refineries in the midwest will be short changed which will result in higher prices for refined gasoline and fuel oil in the midwest states.

The people of Kansas will pay more but will still vote against their own interests as the Koch fueled propaganda poisons the airwaves and contaminates the thinking processes of otherwise sane Americans just as it effects Alaskans who should know better.